Well, you started it in my thread about something completely different, so here I am
Deoxy... your stance is just silly. It's creationist-evolution-denial-silly.
It HAS been getting warmer. What remains debatable isn't that, but rather exactly WHY it's getting warmer. Most notably, is it mainly our fault or not. It's debatable because the current climate models are still far from taking everything into account, and as the saying goes 'Garbage in, garbage out".
There are cutting edge climate theories that are not taken into account, such as the variation in cloud cover (and thereby albedo) due to the amount of cosmic radiation hitting the atmosphere. Cosmic rays - the kind from distant supernovae and other highly energetic events out there - ionize the upper atmosphere, creating particles which eventually drift down and become droplet formation cores, leading to more clouds. Lower amounts of cosmic rays = less cloud formation = lower albedo = warming climate. The amount of cosmic rays is fairly steady in and of itself, but is influenced by solar activity. The solar wind deflects them. So, when solar activity is low, more clouds form, and vice versa. The solar wind itself is a plasma, so it doesn't do the same job; plasma follows the magnetic field of the Earth and only enters the atmosphere near the poles.
That's just one of the mechanisms not taken into account by current climate models, which only deal with solar activity variations insofar as pertains to direct energy output, which of course does cause modest warming.
Another thing, that arguably is our fault, is dark particulate matter lowering the albedo of icecaps - although it has nothing to do with CO
2.
There's also the interesting fact that ice core and geological evidence of past warming periods also shows a steep increase of CO
2, so it should come as no surprise that we're seeing one now as it gets warmer. Warm water simply isn't as good at dissolving it as colder water is, and so it is released from the oceans in staggering quantities.
It all has to be in the computer models to be able to forecast anything with any sort of accuracy, and it isn't, because some of the science is so new that the effects have not yet been exactly quantified. Instead, it gets left out completely.
Current global warming theory, as represented by the IPCC, has unfortunately become something of a pseudo-religious movement and a political hot potato. Gainsaying, however sober and scientific, has become a kind of heresy. People risk being shunned. Scientists risk their tenures. Many do not have the necessary courage of their convictions, and who can blame them; researchers have to eat, too.
The easiest way to grant money nowadays is through researching whatever
in the light of global warming (as presented by the IPCC consensus).
For a politician, it is a serious obstacle to success if alternative views on global warming are voiced. Well, except in certain areas of mid-western USA
Science should never be a matter of belief or politics. Science thrives on disagreement -
not consensus.
A theory is
never supposed to be absolute truth. That is the realm of religion, not science.
Alas, the IPCC brand of global warming theory is treated as absolute gospel truth.
It's not a conspiracy, but it has taken on a life of its own and has become counterproductive to any scientific research going in a different direction.
EDIT: It's worth noting that it actually hasn't been getting warmer for about a decade, and now there seems to be a cooling trend. The regular 11 year solar activity cycle is still delayed. According to it, we're due for a solar maximum in 2012, and the Sun should have been observed ramping up its activity for several years now. That didn't happen. It remains at solar minimum conditions. Most of the time there are no sunspots at all, and when a few appear, they are very small. Right now, it's 43 days since a single spot was observed. Should this continue for decades (in what is known as a Maunder minimum) - which it has done in the past - global cooling will become our next problem.